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***apologies for cross-posting***

ARLIS/NA Multimedia & Technology Reviews Needs You!

ARLIS/NA Multimedia & Technology Reviews Co-editors are seeking volunteers
to author reviews for the April 2018 issue. To volunteer, choose a resource
from the list below and complete our Reviewer Interest form (
https://goo.gl/forms/Y2T9HPNinHznHFeK2) by Monday, January 29.

Initial draft submissions are due Friday, March 2, 2018.

Contributing to ARLIS/NA Multimedia & Technology Reviews
<https://www.arlisna.org/publications/multimedia-technology-reviews> is a
great opportunity to get involved with the Society, learn about interesting
new resources, and help shape the publication. Please feel free to
read the complete
review guidelines
<https://arlisna.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=303:for-reviewers&catid=38:multimedia-technology-reviews&Itemid=146>
and
direct comments and questions about the reviews to [log in to unmask]

Submitted by ARLIS/NA Multimedia & Technology Reviews Co-editors:

Melanie Emerson

Gabriella Karl-Johnson

Alexandra Provo

Resources for Review: We seek reviewers for the following resources.

**The snippets below are taken from each resource's web page and are not
necessarily the opinions of the M&T Reviews Co-Editors

David Wojnarowicz Knowledge Base

https://cs.nyu.edu/ArtistArchives/Initiative/the-
david-wojnarowicz-knowledge-base/

Developed by an interdisciplinary research team at New York University, the
David Wojnarowicz Knowledge Base is intended to aid in future exhibition
and conservation of the artist’s works. Included in the resource are
annotated bibliographies, a directory of people with whom he worked, and
information about selected exhibitions of his work.

Umbra Search

https://www.umbrasearch.org

Umbra Search African American History makes African American history more
broadly accessible through a freely available widget and search tool,
umbrasearch.org; digitization of African American materials across
University of Minnesota collections; and support of students, educators,
artists, and the public through residencies, workshops, and events locally
and around the country.

umbrasearch.org brings together more than 500,000 digitized materials from
over 1,000 libraries and archives across the country.

Umbra Search celebrates the vital efforts of the individuals and
institutions that have helped to preserve and make accessible online
hundreds of thousands of pieces of African American history and culture,
and we pay homage to the Umbra Society of the early 1960s, a renegade group
of Black writers and poets who helped create the Black Arts Movement.

A Catalogue Raisonné of Francis Towne (1739-1816)

http://francistowne.ac.uk

A Catalogue Raisonné of Francis Towne (1739-1816), by Richard Stephens, is
published by the Paul Mellon Centre.

In line with the Mellon Centre's commitment to support access to art
history through digital publishing, the catalogue is free to use and is
presented under a CC-BY-NC licence, meaning that it can be copied,
distributed and adapted for any non-commercial use.

The catalogue identifies 1080 works by Towne and his circle, doubling
previously-described totals. Based on the author’s PhD thesis, it makes
extensive use of the papers of Paul Oppé (1878-1957) whose pioneering
researches established the artist’s reputation in the 1920s, after a
century of neglect.

Epoiesen

http://www.mappingpaintings.org

ἐποίησεν (epoiesen)- made - is a journal for exploring creative engagement
with the past, especially through digital means. It publishes primarily
what might be thought of as ‘paradata’ or artist’s statements that
accompany playful and unfamiliar forms of singing the past into existence.
These could be visualizations, art works, games, pop-up installations,
poetry, hypertext fiction, procedurally generated works, or other forms yet
to be devised. We seek to document and valorize the scholarly creativity
that underpins our representations of the past. Epoiesen is therefore a
kind of witness to the implied knowledge of archaeologists, historians, and
other professionals, academics and artists as it intersects with the
sources about the past. It encourages engagement with the past that reaches
beyond our traditional audience (ourselves).

Smartify

https://smartify.org

Smartify is a free app that allows you to scan and identify artworks,
access rich interpretation and build a personal art collection in some of
the world’s best museums and galleries.

***Note: reviewer must be able to visit one of the institutions that has
enabled Smartify. Venues in the US include: J. Paul Getty Museum, Los
Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA), Laguna Art Museum, Museum of
Contemporary Photography, Freer | Sackler Galleries, The Metropolitan
Museum of Art, The Met Cloisters. For the full list of institutions, see
the Smartify website.

ArchNet

https://archnet.org

Archnet is a globally-accessible, intellectual resource focused on
architecture, urbanism, environmental and landscape design, visual culture,
and conservation issues related to the Muslim world. Archnet’s mission is
to provide ready access to unique visual and textual material to facilitate
teaching, scholarship, and professional work of high quality. Officially
launched in 2002 as a partnership between the Aga Khan Trust for Culture
and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Archnet has since
evolved into the largest open, online architectural library with a focus on
Muslim cultures. Its digital archives form a comprehensive resource on
architecture, urban design, landscape, development, and related issues.

Manet Paintings and Works on Paper at the Art Institute of Chicago

https://publications.artic.edu/manet/reader/manetart/section/140020

The digital catalogue contains in-depth curatorial and conservation
research on the museum’s collection, including high-resolution, zoomable
images and other interactive elements.

Library Stack

https://www.librarystack.org/

Library Stack is a living collection of independent ebooks, audio files,
videos and digital documents being published within the fields of
contemporary art, design, media studies, cinema, architecture and
philosophy. We collect serial publications from established platforms and
primary source material from artists, authors, designers and cultural
thinkers, often including overlooked media such as typefaces, podcasts, 3D
models, field recordings and software. Many such independently produced
digital art publications are not being archived and are at risk of being
lost from the historical record. Library Stack preserves and indexes all
works according to Open Archive standards, and exposes them to the global
library system through the WorldCat database.


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